Dan Jones ,,,Good Stuff
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- Chuck S. Lettes
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- Anders Eriksson
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My kind of music!
For a little more
http://www.myspace.com/standarddeviations
Thank you for sharing your music!
// Anders
For a little more
http://www.myspace.com/standarddeviations
Thank you for sharing your music!
// Anders
Fessenden D-10, Stage One S-10, Peavey Nashville 112, Boss LMB-3, Goodrich 120; Regal RD-38VS Resonator
Daneil Jones
http://www.youtube.com/user/tekweenie
Daniel Jones - Pedal Steel Guitar
Mitch Jervis - Electric Guitar
Austin Hein - Bass
Larry Ziehl - Drums
Daniel Jones - Pedal Steel Guitar
Mitch Jervis - Electric Guitar
Austin Hein - Bass
Larry Ziehl - Drums
Dan Layne
- CrowBear Schmitt
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Daniel Jones
Is it just me,or does that Mullen have one of the best tones (That I have heard in a long Time)
Dan Layne
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Gosh guys, thanks for all the wonderful comments. Coming from you all, they really mean a lot.
On the group, these are indeed fine musicians and swell guys, and I feel most appreciative to play with them. I have always enjoyed standards and jazz as a listener, so I figured (and was urged on by Mitch, the guitar player) I should just take a leap and put together a group that plays this stuff. While not the most commercial, we really enjoy for ourselves the depth of this music; it makes us work, and when it comes together it's a treat to play.
We did the video ourselves (with the help of numerous friends--who were paid in pizza), using 4-5 borrowed video cameras and recording the audio on Mitch's computer (I forget exactly what software he uses). Then Mitch and his friend, Greg, synced the audio-video tracks and edited down perspectives from the multiple cameras (mucho thanks to Mitch and Greg for spending many hours on this). Overall, we thought the quality came out pretty good (though we realize we leave some things to be desired as performers).
On the tone, once again thanks for the nice comment. As we all know, the pursuit of good tone can become an obsession (and a frustration). And I've certainly done my share of obsessing, trying different equipment, etc. (ask my wife!), and probably will do so periodically in the future. As for equipment here (we all know that much if not most of tone is in the touch, which again we all wrestle with), I'm happy to share what I'm using that I think makes a difference: plastic finger picks (as opposed to metal), Lace BassBar pick-ups, a tube amp (this is an early 1990s Dual Showman), an Altec 417-8H speaker, and a Sennheiser E609 mic on the speaker. Happy to discuss any of these choices with people; e-mail me directly.
Thanks again, and as Mitch likes to say, "Forward, into the void!"
Daniel
On the group, these are indeed fine musicians and swell guys, and I feel most appreciative to play with them. I have always enjoyed standards and jazz as a listener, so I figured (and was urged on by Mitch, the guitar player) I should just take a leap and put together a group that plays this stuff. While not the most commercial, we really enjoy for ourselves the depth of this music; it makes us work, and when it comes together it's a treat to play.
We did the video ourselves (with the help of numerous friends--who were paid in pizza), using 4-5 borrowed video cameras and recording the audio on Mitch's computer (I forget exactly what software he uses). Then Mitch and his friend, Greg, synced the audio-video tracks and edited down perspectives from the multiple cameras (mucho thanks to Mitch and Greg for spending many hours on this). Overall, we thought the quality came out pretty good (though we realize we leave some things to be desired as performers).
On the tone, once again thanks for the nice comment. As we all know, the pursuit of good tone can become an obsession (and a frustration). And I've certainly done my share of obsessing, trying different equipment, etc. (ask my wife!), and probably will do so periodically in the future. As for equipment here (we all know that much if not most of tone is in the touch, which again we all wrestle with), I'm happy to share what I'm using that I think makes a difference: plastic finger picks (as opposed to metal), Lace BassBar pick-ups, a tube amp (this is an early 1990s Dual Showman), an Altec 417-8H speaker, and a Sennheiser E609 mic on the speaker. Happy to discuss any of these choices with people; e-mail me directly.
Thanks again, and as Mitch likes to say, "Forward, into the void!"
Daniel
- Jim Lindsey (Louisiana)
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Daniel, that's wonderful stuff. Man, I second what others have said. Touch, taste and tone is all there par excellence and (perhaps most importantly) the band, everyone, makes a musical statement with each note. There's true communication there musically (it's always a treat when you hear players make a musical statement as opposed to several moments of nondescript scales and arpeggios). This was true and tasteful music that I've placed under my YouTube favorites to come back and listen to over and over again.
Absolutely great job!
Absolutely great job!
1986 Mullen D-10 with 8 & 7 (Dual Bill Lawrence 705 pickups each neck)
Two Peavey Nashville 400 Amps (with a Session 500 in reserve) - Yamaha SPX-90 II
Peavey ProFex II - Yamaha R-1000 Digital Reverb - Ross Time Machine Digital Delay - BBE Sonic Maximizer 422A
ProCo RAT R2DU Dual Distortion - Korg DT-1 Pro Tuner (Rack Mounted) - Furman PL-8 Power Bay
Goodrich Match-Bro by Buddy Emmons - BJS Steel Bar (Dunlop Finger Picks / Golden Gate Thumb Picks)
Two Peavey Nashville 400 Amps (with a Session 500 in reserve) - Yamaha SPX-90 II
Peavey ProFex II - Yamaha R-1000 Digital Reverb - Ross Time Machine Digital Delay - BBE Sonic Maximizer 422A
ProCo RAT R2DU Dual Distortion - Korg DT-1 Pro Tuner (Rack Mounted) - Furman PL-8 Power Bay
Goodrich Match-Bro by Buddy Emmons - BJS Steel Bar (Dunlop Finger Picks / Golden Gate Thumb Picks)
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Wow. Where's he been hiding? Great stuff indeed. Love it. Gotta put some of these up on the www.SteelGuitarJazz.com website. Thanks for the tip!
Jim
Jim
- Jan Jonsson
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Wow! That is one of the best sounding jazz steel playing I've heard in a very long time.
Thanks for sharing!
-- Jan
Thanks for sharing!
-- Jan
CDs: Waltz for Elma (2015), Steel Reflections (2009)
Gear: 10-string Desert Rose "Delta Blues", Fender Deluxe 8, Fender CS Nocaster
Transcriptions of Lloyd Green's music: www.lloydgreentribute.com (Tablature menu)
Gear: 10-string Desert Rose "Delta Blues", Fender Deluxe 8, Fender CS Nocaster
Transcriptions of Lloyd Green's music: www.lloydgreentribute.com (Tablature menu)
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